Public extrajudicial killing shocks the country

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Police arrested five soldiers for shooting dead a young man at point blank range in a park after the killing was filmed live and broadcast on television, shocking human rights activists.
Five members of the Rangers paramilitary rounded on 25-year-old Sarfaraz Shah in Karachi’s most exclusive neighbourhood of Clifton on Wednesday, claiming he had tried to rob a policeman’s family.
A police official later told AFP on condition of anonymity that only a toy gun had been recovered. The public park is named after assassinated former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, whose family home is in Clifton.
Footage of the incident, filmed by an unidentified cameraman, was broadcast repeatedly on local television stations and uploaded to Internet site YouTube.
The clean-shaven man, wearing black trousers and a navy shirt, is seen crying and pleading for his life as a soldier cocked his rifle at his neck.
A soldier is heard saying: “This is the man” to which the man responds: “I am helpless, my friend.”
“Please do not fire, please not, please please,” he cried.
After being shot in the hand and thigh, as blood seeps onto the ground, the man pleads: “Please take me to the hospital, please take me, please save me, o friend save me.”
He tries to stand, but quickly crumples to the ground. A soldier is heard saying: “Ok, that’s enough”. The man continues to beg for help as soldiers appear to amble around, watching him fall unconscious and bleed to death.
Several hundred people attended Shah’s funeral in Karachi, the country’s biggest city which has suffered scores of killings linked to political and ethnic tensions in recent months. Mourners chanted “the Rangers are killers.”
Late Wednesday, Shah’s relatives took his body to the house of the chief minister of Sindh province, of which Karachi is the capital, demanding that the soldiers be arrested.
The victim’s older brother Salik, who is a TV reporter, said Sarfaraz — who was initially named wrongly by police as Sabir — was a student who had been looking for work to support his poverty-stricken family.
“He was a decent and mannered person with no criminal record whatsoever. Charges from the Rangers that he was a robber are ridiculous and criminal.”
“He went to the park to pass the time. He was brutally shot and left to die because of profuse bleeding.”
“What we want is justice. Befitting justice.”
Leading human rights activists and lawyers condemned the killing as a sign of how brutalised Pakistan has become, after years of bomb attacks, targeted assassinations, kidnappings and a Taliban insurgency in the northwest.
Interior Minister Rehman Malik ordered the arrest of the soldiers involved and a departmental inquiry.
“This act is extremely unlawful, even if the youth was a robber it did not merit to kill him like this,” Malik told TV channels.
“The suspects in the incident have been arrested. I have ordered for a thorough inquiry.”
The killing mirrored the killings last month of five unarmed Chechens, one of them a pregnant woman in southwestern province Baluchistan.
Zohra Yusuf, chairman of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, said the country had descended into a “trigger-happy society where shoot-to-kill has become routine practice for the law enforcement agencies”.
“We condemn this extrajudicial killing and fear our society is getting brutalised and falling to anarchy, which is needed to be stopped.”
Amin Yousuf, secretary general of Pakistan’s Federal Union of Journalists, said the cameraman who had filmed the killing was now in danger and that the Rangers should merely have arrested Shah if he was involved in a crime.
“A cameraman of a local TV channel happened to be there to do a story on the park, when he saw the incident and filmed it.
“The cameraman’s life is in danger. He has got threats and we are making all efforts to save his life,” said Yousuf.

4 COMMENTS

  1. Israel treats Palestinians better than this.

    Rangers are dogs. So are the leaders who raise them.

  2. this is the most awful, disgusting, dastardly act. It should be condemned in every possible way.

  3. I am speecless. My heart goes out to the poor soul who suffered so brutally and for nothing. My heart also goes out to his family. My heart also worries what the children of our nation will learn from all this. Will they learn it is ok to kill, or will they learn that they must build a nation that is not so abnormal? Or will they learn both and end up in a constant struggle?
    We as adults need to realise that it doesn’t end with a life. The example can live on for generations and it just grows and grows. We need to find a way to channel our frustrations and anger toward a productive target and perhaps become achievers rather than losers and a disgrace to society and our nation.afterall how are we bringing up our children who turn into adults with such morals and values? The youth is everything as it is our tomorrow and we need to pay it its due attention.
    I would also lay partial responsibilty on the rulers and governors of Pakistan. Isn’t it their responsibility to provide basic human rights (before a tragedy occurs)? Can they please give a little bit of time to our security and freedom apart from just lining their pockets manifold and taking advantage of “equal” opportunities?
    I would suggest that the murderers be publicly humiliated/ punished and an example be set. If its not done, then remember, all Prophets came to Arabia – the land of wild hethens, and we are not too far from that. And we all know what happens then: REVOLUTION.

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